The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope: The Final Archive
William V. Dixon, William P. Blair, Jeffrey W. Kruk, and Mary L., Romelfanger

TL;DR
This paper details the reprocessing and archiving of the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope data, providing modern, calibrated spectral products and images to enhance accessibility and usability for the scientific community.
Contribution
The authors developed a new data-reduction pipeline, reprocessed the entire HUT archive, and created a comprehensive, modern FITS-based data set compatible with Virtual Observatory standards.
Findings
Produced a new set of calibrated spectral products in FITS format.
Generated quick-look plots and pointing history for each exposure.
Converted TV guider images into FITS files for improved data analysis.
Abstract
The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) was a 0.9 m telescope and moderate-resolution (~3 A) far-ultraviolet (820-1850 A) spectrograph that flew twice on the space shuttle, in 1990 December (Astro-1, STS-35) and 1995 March (Astro-2, STS-67). The resulting spectra were originally archived in a non-standard format that lacked important descriptive metadata. To increase their utility, we have modified the original data-reduction software to produce a new and more user-friendly data product, a time-tagged photon list similar in format to the Intermediate Data Files (IDFs) produced by the {\it Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer} calibration pipeline. We have transferred all relevant pointing and instrument-status information from locally-archived science and engineering databases into new FITS header keywords for each data set. Using this new pipeline, we have reprocessed the entire HUT…
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